THE OMAHA DAILY BEEi TUESDAY, 'FEBRUARY 20, 1906. The Omaha Daily Dee. ; E. ROBE WATER. EDITOR. ' rVBUSHED EVERT MORNINO. ' TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Pally Bee (without Bunday), one year. .WW Dally Bee and 8undy. one year Illustrated Bee, one year J" Bunday Bee, one year J-; Patarday Bee, one year ' DELIVERED BT CARRIER. IalW Bee (Inrludlng Sunday), per week. .13 Dally Bee (without Sunday . per week..l2i Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week e. Evening Bee (with Bunday), per week..l0r Bunday Bee, per ropy Address romplalnta of Irregularities In de livery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. Bouth Omaha-City Hall Building. Council Bluffs-M Pearl Street. fhlrgo-l40 Unity Building. New York-lSfla Home Mr Inn. Building. Washington K1 Fourteenth Street. i ' CORRESPQNDENCE. remmunlostlons relating to newa and ed itorial matter ahould be addressed: Omaha Bee Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only -eent stamps received as payment of mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraaka, Douglas County, sa.: C. C. Rosewater. eecretary of The Be Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and complete coplea of The Dally. Morning. Evening and Sundar Bee printed during the month of January, 1908, was as ioiiows; n,tvno 17.. IS.. 19.. 20.. si.. 22.. ai.noo llt.TTO 31.4ft 82,240 30,100 31.4HO 81.970 JIl.THO 81.TT0 82.84IO 7..... BO.ISO S S1.T30 f 81.61)0 10. . ....,,. 32,OdO ji aiao 12 SI'MI It 82,444) 14 24):m 15 31.K70 1 31.T7W Total n 8i.o 14 81,4) TO 25 81.8TO 26 81.410 27 82,320 28 3O.OM0 19 S1.3BO 50 31.30O 51 31JHIO .1,00.1,400 n,o;i8 Legs unaold coplea Net total sales 1)1)2,4 1 Dally average 8a,014 C. C. ROSEWATER. 1 Secretary. Subscribed In my presence and aworn to before me tbla 31st day of January, 1906. (Heal) , M. It. lluisuATfe, . . RJntnpU B-illlltf A V J mw.sw MHKS OVT OF TOWX. ' iabacrlbera ImtIii the elty tern Borarlly . shenld hare The Be snallea to them. Address will be haaged aa often mm requested. ! . a Now that the wedding Is over It may not be out of plnce to watch the vibra tions of the "big stick.'1 The bridge over which Mayor Moores hag crossed into the Broutch camp was Tom Dennlson and Walter Molse. Heavy snows are reported at the head waters of the Missouri river, but an "open" winter is rarely followed by a flood. h Strangers with mistaken ideas should be given to understand once for all that there Is no room for dynamiters in the Black Hills. A long as .the mlxxtonnrtps are not worrying it will be difficult niuco excitement in America over a probable Chinese uprising. John D, Rockefeller Is not in Naples. If reports come from .enough different places the missing oil magnate may be located by the process of elimination. There are now sot many Insurgents on the councilmanic firing line that club endorsements will practically count for Uttlt In this devll-take-the-hlndmost King Alfonso and lrlncess Ena may nave more pomp and ceremony but they will have no more good wishes than accompanied the White House bridal pair, i Kansas City Is Jubilating over the prospects of a new railway passenger Station which has been its longest-felt want but, like many mining claims, It Is only a prospect. A few more changes In the senate committee on elections may secure a majority which will be ready to report the Bmoot case by the time a Utah legis lature la ready to elect his. successor. The Algedras conference has reached a state where the Sultan of Morocco feels warranted in firing upon French filibusters. The kaiser has evidently scored ft point not recorded in the dis patches. , Since Chicago has won the drainage caual suit It devolves upon St Louis to prove that It was mistaken In assert ing that Its drinking water was laden with deadly microbes as a result of the big ditch. Former President Cleveland gave John A. McCall his start in the in surance business and McCall and bis friends gave Mr. Cleveland an opportu ulty to draw wsges from the same con cerns. Turn about Is fair play. King Edward is said to have made a "colorless" speech at the opening of the British parliament, but the Irish mem bers will probably see that the session does not end without spreading enough green to satisfy the most exacting. Having proven that the governor of Iudlana had no right to remove him, the secretary of state has resigned under charges. He will hardly ask to be "vin dicated" as Indiana Is not closa enough to Kansas for such a policy to succeed. . .Laudatory orators at Commercial club banquets who art wont to declare that the Interests of the railroads and of Omaha are always Identical are Invited to direct their attention to the efforts Of certain roads to hamper Omaha growth as a grain market These roads ft re doubtless standing In their own Ilgfet, but that they are at cross pur poses with the Interests of Omaha I llia Is day. ; PRosrtcrs vr the rate bill. Moat careful observers of the situa tion at Washington Insist that the rail way rate Mil, although it will by no means have smooth sailing, lias a fnlr nssursnif of securing the necessary majority In the senate when It comes to a vote of trmt body. The pressure of public opinion In support of the position of President Koosevelt has had telling effect and while a considerable number In fact altogether too large a number of senators under direct or Indirect corporation control, will braen it out in defiant disregard of the wishes of their constituents, a steadily Increas ing number are realizing that opposi tion to the bill borders on political sui cide and are hesitating at political self extinction. One of the latest polls of the senate, said to have been made by friends of the Hepburn bill, is reported to have disclosed 40 senators unreservedly for it and 24 outspokenly against it, with 24 doubtfuls, of which 11 are expected to ote for the bill eventually, 12 more probably' against it, and one absolutely noncommittal. This figures up a total of 88, there being one vacant seat from Delaware and one senator from Kansas not participating in the business of the senate. It is interesting to note further that, although rate regulation la essentially a measure urged by the republican ad ministration, of those for the rate bill 24 are democrats as against 16 republi cans and of those opposing It only 2 are democrats as against 22 republl- ans. Six more republicans, however, are in the list of doubtfuls expected to vote for the bill and 5 republicans ns against 5 democrats and of the doubt fuls expected to vote against the bill one is a democrat nnd eleven are re publicans. It is also of passing Interest to note that this poll still classes Sen ator Millard of Nebraska among the doubtful senators inclined to vote agninst the bill although he has stated publicly that he is not opposed to the positron of the president There may, however, be a more or less different lineup when It comes to voting on various proposed amend ments, and yet if the friends of the measure can keep it from being emas culated on Its way to a final vote every indication points that it will go through the senate with a safe and substantial majority. The possibility always remains of modifications being made In the senate unacceptable to the house necessitating reference to a conference committee to attempt to adjust such differences. The temper of the house as reflected In the almost unanimous vote on the Hepburn Mil gives little reason to believe that the house will recede on any vital point so that the senate will be compellefl at the last extreme to vote the bill up or down substantially as it stands. On tills vote; unless some unforeseen revul sion of sentiment occurs, the mujorlty of the senate may be expected to be counted with the president. CANADA'S TARXrr ISQUIJIT. The Canadian tariff commission has concluded Its Inquiry, which has been In progress five months. It Is stated thnt the result of the Inquiry points to a stand pat policy. A leading Dominion paper observes that the broad moral to bo drawn from the Inquiry Is to leave well enough alone. "The country la doing well, the manufacturers, the mer chants, the farmers, the mechanics, are doing well. There is no cry for ft change. We have had for the past eight years a stable tariff and that has been more important than the putting Into practice of fanciful notions In the shape of scientific tariffs which lead we know not where." This view will be regarded with entire satisfaction by American manufacturers, but will It be accepted by tho manufacturers of Canada? They have been urging higher duties In order that they may have better pro tection agninst the competition of the United States. In view of this It ap pears improbable that the Canadian manufacturers will be found willing to have the tariff stand as it is. On the contrary It is to be expected that they will continue to urge such changes as they believe would be to their benefit in restricting American competition and It is by no means improbable that the government will give some heed to their demand. The future fiscal polity of Canada is a matter of no small Interest to this country. If there is no radical change our manufacturers will continue to have a large trade with the Dominion, while If duties should bo materially Increased a considerable portion of this valuable trade will be lost It Is gratifying to find that there is a sentiment in Canada In favor of letting well enough alone. REXOVATE THE CITY HALL. The city hall building, erected at ft cost of more than half a million dollars, has for years been shamefully neglected and is rapidly going to wreck and ruin. The structure needs mechanical over hauling Inside and outside. The mosaic tiling on the ground floor looks like a rag carpet that has been patched until the original web and woof Is obliterated by holes and patches. The walls and woodwork are sadly out of Joint, the plastering cracked and the paint scaled off. The art glass sky light looks as if it bad uudergone bom bardment with grapeshot and canlater and the elevators are wobbly. If not ac tually dangerous. The steam plant needa overhauling and repairing. The same condition of neglect Is strik ingly apparent on inspection of the structure from the outside. The gran Ite and stone walls are discolored and smoked up from basement to tower. The whole building needs pointing up and the brick walls on the east and north need both pointing and palntlug. There Is absolutely no excuse for the- parsimony aud indifference exhibited by the city authorities in the treatment of the only strictly fireproof municipal building that Omaha has erected at the public expense. If the city lacks the necessary funds for maintaining this building, fnnds should 1m? provided even If It requires the Issue of a few thousand dollars of city hall mainte nance bonds. THE MAYORSHIP SOT HKREDITART In this republic of ours sovereignty U not transmitted by Inheritance. Every American cltlsen Is a sovereign and every public officer Is a public servant The president cannot name his own suc cessor, neither can the governor of a state nor the mayor of a city. Those who have tried to-exercise executive power to name their successors In office have rarely been successful and most generally been snubbed by the people. These facts suggest themselves by the attempt of Mayor Moores to name his own successor. Mayor Moores has been generously treated by the citizens of Omaha and Douglas county. He held the most lucrative office In the state for eight years and the most po tential office In the city of Omaha for the same length of time. He should have been satisfied to allow the people of Omaha to make their own choice of mayor, whether he has been his polit ical and personal friend or adversary. The attempt of'Mnyor Moores to foist W. J. Broatch upon the people of Omaha as a legacy will not redound to his credit or tend to keep his memory green in-the eyes of his personal and political friends. In a nutshell, the mayorship of Omaha Is not hereditary. It cannot be transmitted from father to son. let alone from an outgoing mayor to nn in coming mayor. The editor's work upon the revision of Rowell's American Newspaper Directory for 1908, which will be Issued about the 1st of June, reveals that the circulations of the most successful newspapers are generally smaller than they were last year; a fact that is explained by the absence of news so Interesting and exciting as that concern ing the Russo-Japaneae war. So reluctant are publishers to admit a falling off In cir culation that the reports for the Directory show an appreciable diminution In numbers, notwithstanding the fact that nothing else so convlncea an advertiser of a publisher's truthfulness as his admission that he does not print so many copies now as he did a little while ago. Printers Ink. But the circulation liars of the two Omaha fakerles are never bothered this way. They mnke their figures soar up ward by leaps and bounds Irrespective of any and nil conditions. The Bee alone of Omnha dallies tells Its patrons its real circulation day by day when It goes up nnd when It goes down. Omaha preachers always complain that the newspapers exhibit neither in terest nor sympathy In their labors, but they seem to forget that the great body of their audiences are reached through the press and not from the pulpit And they seem, moreover, to forget that by far the most valuable contributions they receive is the space . given up to their sermons by the newspapers. The executive committee of the Com merclnl club proposes to discuss the rat Crowe verdict. What Is to be sc- compllshed by the discussion Is not con ceivable. The club cannot hang the Jury and the Jury won't hang Itself, al though its failure to convict or hang has been a surprise and a disappoint ment. Prejudice-blinded partisans who used to pretend to believe that Tom Dennlson controlled The Bee and held Rosewater under his thumb will please take notice that Rosewater and The Bee have de clined to be delivered by anybody over to the candidacy of W. J. Broatch. . With the Bensontan club, the Jack sonlan club, the Dablman club, the Equal Rights club and the Police Com mission club, all rtnglng the changes, the average Omaha voter will have ft merry time from now on until May day. A Pertlaeat Q.eatloa. Philadelphia Reoord. The coal mine owners are prosperous. The coal miners were never before doing so well. Why should they kill the gooae that laya their golden eggs? There Will Be Bonsetblag Dlagr. Baltimore American. A young Pottawatomie Indian has been appointed a cadet at West Point. There ought to be something doing when his turn cornea to be hased. He should get a few acalpa In the scuffle. Arooalasc the Sleeper. Pittsburg Dispatch. Western civilisation seema obliged to wrestle with the delicate problem of bow to get China just enough awake to buy the western goods and at the same time to keep it so far asleep that It will not resent being bullied and despised by the representatives of the white peril. . Another Capper Senator. Hartford Times. F. Augustus Helnse. not yet 40 years of age, and with less than twenty years of effort, haa the credit of making himself the possessor of over $30,000,000. with an excellent prospect of gathering a g'T, many more. ' If he wishes to go to the United States senate from Montana as the colleague of Millionaire Clark, he may have his wish gratified. Indeed, It would not be at all strange If that were to prove a part of the consideration In the settlement he has just effected with the masters of the Amal gamated. A Temporary Affllctlea. Henry Watterson in the Courier-Journal. The yellow journal cannot. In my opin ion, last In time people will become fa miliar and grow tired of its tricks and Its manners. Sausages of dog meat, though haver so highly seasoned, will after a while sicken all but the coarsest stomachs particularly when sausages are known to be made of dog meat. The general publlo will be educated to understand the differ ence between sensational and fake matter and legitimate and reliable news. Sprawl ing headlines will no longer suffice to carry fabrications and exaggerations, and will cease to provoke curiosity, and therefore to make talk and attract attention. Read ers will mark the false statement of today which must be corrected, or Ignored, to morrow, and will require of their newspa per, as of their butcher and their baker, straight food and fair dealing. EATIOAL JOVRXAMSM. I. la f t'leaiaae Betweea Dereaey 4 Demoralisation. Chicago Tribune. The Arche club has determined to add Its strength to the cause of decent Jour nalism. By a unanimous resolution It has declared war upon those newspapers whlc-h print "details of crime In an attractive and sensational manner," and pledged It self "to give auport financially and morally to those newspapers maintaining the highest standard of decency and mo rality? No newspapers were named by the club. but It was quite unnecessary to point out that there Is a great difference In the way that Items regarding crime are treated by the press. It Is essential to the protec tion of the publlo that Information be given of the dangers of life In a large city. Such Information may take the form of warnings of localities and persons to be avoided, may be In the nature of ap peals to the officers of the law to enforce laws which are violated, or may be pub lished for the purpose of arousing publlo sentiment to secure such enforcement. From the news standpoint only, without regard to any ulterior benefit. It Is legiti mate to Inform the friends and acquaint ances of Injured persons that a crime lias been committed. The commission of a crime presupposes a victim. The one can not be mentioned without the other. The Arche club recognises these elementary truths and does not demand that all re ports of crime should be barred from the publlo press. The abuse against which the forces which work for a- higher tone of morality are arrayed la the dishing up of spicy de tails. In whose printing some newspapers take an unconcealed delight. It Is the modification of reports so aa to arouse a maudlin sympathy for the criminal. De tailed confessions by unrepentant crimi nals can serve no useful end. Published without comment, they may even have the effect of glorifying the hero of a clever or daring assault upon the rights of his fellow men and women. Detailed reports which are not confessions may have the same effect If properly handled. To dwell upon the wrongs, real or Imaginary, of a degenerate, so as to obscure the greater wrong which he fn turn has In flicted upon society. Is to encourage other degenerates In imagining themselves justi fied In seising the things which seem to them good, but of which they are denied. Much of the criminal news printed serves to Inform men of criminal tendencies how easy It Is to commit crime, to escape de tection or to avoid punishment. A newspaper which Is to be a moral power must print news of useful things. It must provide such varied food for the mind that -the reader shall not be gradu ally permeated with the belief that all men are corrupt, that force alone rules and that notoriety Is the highest attain ment of life. The hynotlc effect of exclu sive attention to degrading thoughts Is the cause of many a crime. No newspaper which Is worthy of a place In the home will fall to furnish food for more whole some thoughts. The dally paper la the greatest power In the world for progress In all good things. SENATORS BY PO PILAR VOTE. Fa reef al Argument la Support of the Change. Leslie's Weekly. A full, strong and amply sufficient argu ment In favor of electing United States senators by popular vote has been con densed by the Chicago "News In the fol lowing lines: The Railway -Rate Bill Passed by the house. Killed by the senate. The Pure Food BUI Passed by the house. Killed by the senate. The Statehood, Bill Passed by the house. Killed by the Senate. The Philippine Tariff Reduction Bill- Acted on favorably In the house and would have passed that body had there been a chance for It in the senate. The senate unalterably opposed to it. In the exercise of Its treaty-making pre rogatives, which It shares jointly with the president, the senate has also either Ig nored or defied the overwhelming senti ment of the American people and refused to ratify International arbitration and trade reciprocity. By Its action In the matter of arbitration In particular it has stultified us as a professedly peace-loving nation and given us the unhappy distinc tion of falling behind almost every Eu ropean power In the making of these peace compacts. Its conaervatism here has been of the kind that leans backward, and Is only another name for plgheadedness or moral cowardice. Lately the senate has been Industriously hastening Its own fu neral, as at present constituted, bv de vising all manner of nagging and obstruc tlv tactics to embarrass the Panama canal and - bring It Into disrepute. When we have the fact before us that at least fifty of the present senators owe their political being largely, where not wholly, to rail road Influence, It Is not at all difficult to conceive where this special line of ob struction is prompted. The senate was de signed as the great balance wheel In our federal legislature, but Its usefulness has ceased since it has tried to be the whole machine, and a mighty poor one at that. PERSONAL NOTES. One of the new business blocks in Mont real Is known as "Boodlers' Row." The wherewith came from this side of the line. "Andy" Hamilton, the American exile In Paris, touched the life Inaurance com panies for $1,074,774. Andy Is the condor of his species. Earl Shaw, a son of Secretary Shaw of the treasury, haa gone to Fairbanks, Alaska, where he will take a position under Mayor Barnett, banker and mine owner. Ralph D. Blumenfeld, editor of the Lon don Daily Express, Is an American, having been born In Wisconsin, .and before going abroad had considerable newspaper ex perience in Chicago and New York. Major John Blgelow, .jr., who has suc ceeded General Nelson A. Miles aa military adviser of Governor Guild of Massachu setts, is an author as well ss a military man, having written "Principles of Strat egy" and "Reminiscences of the Santiago Campaign." Sarah Bernhardt was once Interviewed by a reporter on the topic, "If there were an eleventh commandment, what should It be?" The tragedienne exclaimed: "Say to your editor that there munt never be another commandment. It la hard enough to keep the ten we have." After due consideration of the question. the New Tork legislature haa concluded to re-elect Dr. Bt Clair McKelway, editor of the Brooklyn Eagle regent of the Univer sity of the State of New York, a position that he has filled with credit for twenty- two years. It wasn't quite ready to re buke htm for telling the truth about Jus tice Hooker. . Colonel ' Webb C. Hayes, a son of the late president, unveiled the monument at El Caney on Wednesday, erected In mem orr of those who lost their lives In the siege of Santiago. Cuba. Lieutenant Gen eral Chaffee, who presided, spoke of the achievements of the army and coropll mented Cuba upon Its efflot.nt government Booker T. Waahlngton la In New Tork City urging upon negroes the necessity of working for practical and not Imaginary needa. In that city there are 66.000 negroes and Prof. Washington Is devoting his time In the line of widening their field of em ployment. "Stop talking politics and work' Is the burdea of his advice to bis colored brethren. not'KD abovt kew york, Ripple oa tho Correat of Mf In th Metropolis. Financial gossip In the metropolis Is In sistent In claiming that President Itarrt- man of the Union Pacific haa acquired a large tract of land at the western end of Rorkaway Beach. Long Island, with the ultimate object of establishing a great steamship terminal at Jamaica bay. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger says the "object of Mr. Harrlman Is to allow steamships to load and unload at Rockaway. whence the contents may be brought Into the metropolis over the pro posed connecting road of the Pennsylva nia system, across Brooklyn and Queens, and by the bridge of the Pennsylvania system, now under way, to the great de pot In Manhattan, for transmission thence everywhere within the United 8tatea. This Interesting snd magnificent paper project Is a modification of the scheme which long ago contemplated Montatik Point aa the American terminus of ocean passenger and freight service. In connection with the Long Island railroad System. "According to the talk In the financial district, the latest scheme Is believed to be a part of the Harrlman plan to secure an outlet on the Atlantic for his western railroad. For many years Mr. Harrlman haa been engaged In an effort to put through a deal which would make of the Union Pacific a transcontinental line. Only recently It wns reported that he had ef fected an arrangement with the New York Central. While that report was never officially confirmed, the fact that he Is now busy with a scheme for the devel opment of a steamship terminal would suggest that there was at least some truth In It If Mr. Harrlman, either with the New York Central or any other railroad having Its terminus In this city, has per fected an arrangement for a transconti nental line, he could easily make connec tions with the proposed steamship ter minal at Jamaica bay by means of the Long Island road or a system of tunnels, and thus be able to deliver grain and other products from the far weat in the European markets at about half the pres ent expense." Mr. Ahearn, president of the borough of Manhattan, which means New York City proper, has Issued n order that seemed likely to produce visual paralysis among the rltisens who read it. He has said to the street car monopoly that pervades the streets of New York that unless certain lines are overhauled and put In shape, the cars cleaned up and a more adequate service given, he will prevent the operation of any of their vehicles over those lines. He haa Informed the companies that they have made no attempt to maintain a schedule In operation, which in Itself is a violation of law; that they have utterly failed to provide anything like a sufficient number of cars; that the cars reek with filth, have not received a coat of paint In years and are In such a dilapidated condi tion generally as to be a menaco to life and limb. He declares that the people of certain sections have a right to their complaint; that they have been treated with a dis dain of rights that cannot be longer en dured. His orders are peremptory and, as he has power to make trouble for the companies, they will no doubt be obeyed. Wireless 'telegraphy on ocean liners has Increased wonderfully In volume during the last few months. A record number, 1,015 messages, was made by a Hamburg American liner during the week. Stock deals Involving thousands of dollars have been carried through by sea wireless, and a hard up voyager, bound west, has bor rowed several hundred from a friend on a ship going to Europe. This latter trans action was carried on through the pursers of the two ships. The borrower asked his friend for the money, his friend paid It r the purser of his ship, who then notified the purser of the other ship and directed him to turn over a similar sum to the bor rower. The wireless marriage Is yet to be performed. New Yorkers are drinking quite a lot these days. Last month alone 872,000 gal lons of wine were brought here by ships. One hundred and ninety-three thousand six hundred gallons came from California, the rest from Europe. Over 93,000 gallons were from Italy. Of sherry there were ST,- 509 gallons; of Rhine and Moselle wine, 36,480 gallons; of Bordeaux and Burgundy, M40 gallons. There were also 10,606 cases of champagne, some of it for Miss Alloe Roosevelt's wedding reception. New York ers got from abroad 20.000 gallons of brandy, gin, rum and whisky. Four thou sand barrels of domestlo whisky, too, were brought here In January for someody to drink. This makes a grand total of 600,0000 gal lons. Leaping In front of a slxty-mlle-an-hour express. Nelson D. Smith, a wholesale lumber dealer, Wednesday risked his own life to save an old woman who stood be wildered on the tracks directly in the path of the train at Mineola, L. I. While many persons Mood rooted to the station platform with horror, and It seemed cer tain that the woman would be ground to death. Smith projected himself through the air and landed against her with sufficient force to throw both of them to the other track. So close was the woman's escape that as she was daahed out of the locomo tive's way the cowcatcher of the engine scraped her foot They tell in New York of a cltlsen who. while coming home a few days ago from a trip In Europe, sat in a poker game and lost every dollar. Just then the vessel on which he was a passengor got Into Wireless communication with an east bound liner which, the unfortunate gam- Dier Knew, was Dearing to Europe a wealthy friend of his. After an inter change of messages the rich traveler au thorlsed the westbound purser to advance $500 to his penniless friend. The latter at once began to play again, won himself "out of the hole" and landed on this side several hundred richer than he was on leaving London. The steam railways, ranldlv aa thev in crease their facilities, cannot keep up with New York's suburban traffic. This hum shown the opportunity for the high-speed electric railway. From the terminus ol the subway at One Hundred and Seventy seventh street a new road, the New York Weatchester Boston, Is being built tc consist of four tracks over private right-of-way and with no a-rade croaalnrs. This line will mark an epoch la suburban transportation. It will be of as perfect construction as modern engineering can mas. it. renetratlng the heart of beau tltul Westchester county, the road wl run to Portcheater. on the v..l Connecticut boundary line, and to Whit Plains, on the foothills of ih. Rrk.hi. Th.Jln Is being built for electric' express tramo at a mile a minute; lcaJs will run a rast as forty-Hv miles an bour. Thi whole line and branchea lx mlla, but Its roadbed and Mlllnmnt ar th same or better than the steam rail- roaas maintain. ABt Half Right. New York Post. Governor Johnson of Minnesota says that "no man should have more than IlO.aoo year If he Uvea right." As Minnesota pays ner rnier executive only K.000, it looks If tiie governor vrt marly bait right. Fifty Ycara v (CE2EAM m A prmw?3 mm A Cream of Tartar Powdor filadG From Grapes No Alum STATE PRES OPIMOX. Howells Journal: The parcels post Is coming, and that, too, before long. Even the powerful Influence of the express com panies cannot prevent Its coming. Ord Quit: The people of Wheeler county are about to vote on the proposition of giv ing the Midland Central Railroad company 134,000 In bonds of that county In considera tion of the road being extended from Spald ing, Neb., Into Wheeler county. This looks like a lot of money for a mighty little rail road. Central City Republican: It is well to re member that while there is a vast amount of agitation of political reform in Nebraska Just now among the press of the state, that It Is In nowise a reflection upon the party In power, as most of this agitation comes from the republican press, whose editors believe that It Is their duty to seek to cor rect evils wherever they are found and who know that most of the reforms which have been carried out In the past have been the work of the republican party, nnd that whatever reforms come In the future must come from the republican party. York Times: Two months seems to be about the right length of time for the campaign In this state this fall. It is not too long nor too short. It costs money to make a long campaign and there Is really no use of It. When the republican party makes up its mind who It wants for candidates we will go ahead and elect them without any great disturbance about It. Some time during the laat days of Au gust or September 1 would be a date that all would be fairly well satisfied with. A lively campaign while it lasts and one that does not last too long Is the best for all concerned. Kearney Hub: The Omaha Commercial club wants to have the grazing lands of northwest Nebraska turned over to the cattlemen for pasturage. The argument is that these lands are not suited for agricul tural purposes. Time was when people In Omaha would have drawn that same "dead line" lesa than 100 miles west of Omaha, yet that city has doubled and quadrupled in population because of the agricultural development of the former "American desert.". Save all the land for the small homemaker. He will redeem It all and make It blossom like a rose garden. The cattle Industry, which Is In general process of readjustment, will have to find some other way out. Loup Valley Queen: It will be noticed that the Lincoln State Journal and The Omaha Bee are about the only two papers of the state that have anything to say against the Issuance of the pass by the railroads. Why? A moment's thought will tell you why. For years past Lancaatcr and Douglas counties have ruled all slate conventions, so long as they could hold together, end the western part of the state could accomplish nothing against them. Of late years the western delegations have combined agalnat Douglas and Lancaster and had them studying. However, there are but few persons in the western part of the state who feel able to lose the time and pay their car far and Incidental ex penses to attend a state convention. The Bee and Journal realise this, and could they but manage to stop the issuance of passes to the western delegates they could ANNOUNCEMENT WHeeler Sewing Machines for more than fifty years the standard type of ro tary shuttle - movement for making the lock stitch, will hereafter be sold by the SINGER SEWING MACHINE, CO. The Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co. will continue to make these machines as heretofore, the change simply effecting greater economy in the cost of selling, a saving which will prove to be of material benefit to purchasers, who will now be enabled to select at Singer Stores LocK-Stitch Machines cillating, Rotary or .Vibrating Shuttle. Prices to Suit All Purses. Many Styles of Cabinet WorK. Needles for All MaKes of Machines. MACHINES RENTED, SOLD, EXCHANGED. Singer Sewing Machine Co- 1514 DOUGLAS STRXET ' ALSO Nebraska Cycle Co. 15th and Harney Strut., Omaha, Ncbr.ia Uto Standard havo everything their own way and con trol the politics of the state with eaje. They, in pretense of favoring the people and fighting the railroads, are working to this end, and If they continue to blind the- people under this cover, the western part of the state need never expect any thing more than it hns. LAKilllXJ I.IKS. "What makes you think our friend be lieves in reincarnation?" "lie says ho expects to see the Panama canal completed." Washington Star. He They say. you know, that two can live as cheap as one. She Tea, but I'm too old to try ex- permieiiin. t-ieveiunu mm i-n-nier. Three Hermans were sitting at luneheo recently and were overheard discussing th second marrlaire of a mutual friend, when one or them remarked: "I II tel vou vhat A mun vhnt niHrrfc rie seconn time non t deserve to have lost his nrst vife." Brook lyn Life. "Senator," asked the Inquisitive constit uent, "why nro appropriations for Internal improvements, such as erecting public buildings, mnklng rivers navigable, and the like, called pork?' " "Because," said the statesman, "you fel lows squeal till you get It, and Unci Sam grunta when he gives it out." Chi cago Tribune. "Fanners," announced the fnlr vlaltnr from the city, "arc just hs dishonest as city milkmen." "How d'ye make that out?" asked her host. "Why. I saw your hired man thla morn ing water wry one of the cows before he milked them." Cleveland Leader. "When I saw him yesterday he said s was looking for trouble." "Well, I guess he saw It." "How do you know?" Because he cuti't see anything today." Philadelphia Lodger. "In my business," said the stork broker, "It is l:v.;)OH8lble to succeed without pluck." "Huh!" snorted the man who had been up against It. .vou mean 'plucking,' don't you?" Philadelphia Press. Young Doctor He aeems to have every confidence in my ability to save him. Old Doctor Is he delirious on other subjects, also? Juilge. , !.) ACiO. Baltimore American. TVie daylight fades In splendor pale. And night drops down her stnry veil. 'Twlxt sunny light and coming dark My thoughts to- memory's calling hark. As, past the burdens of the day. In dreams the moments g'de away: Then in fond flight those mmories go Back to the days of Long Ago! Was't the gleam cf youth's bright star That niHilo those memories what they ar Did waters from Its fountains clear Make life more fresh Its joys more dear Than all success of later age Could wrlle on Time's succeeding page? Yet keener thnn the joys we know, The dear delights of Long Ago! And as they pass In memory's eye. How from the heart comes up a sigh That they are gone their blisses keen Touched, ghost-like, with a misty sheen How, dreaming, do we live them o'er. And mourn them with a yearning sore. I nose nappy limes we cnerisnea so Tho past delights of Long Ago! Yet in fond dreams, we hav them stilt. And fondly do they come at will. To spare a pang of present pnln I would not lose their thought ngaln For all the world, I would not be Without their happy memory. Ah, never can I let you go. Oh, lost delights of Ixng Ago! (SL Wilson Chain-vStitch Machines 'Elastic Seam. Mo Bobbin, No Shuttle. f